Old Dog. New Trick. Craig Karges.
(Publisher's Note: This feature was published a few years ago, but Craig is so impressive, it deserves to be circulated once again. Enjoy!)
He doesnât do tricks. Be respectful, for goodness sake.
Theyâre not tricks. They are âperformance pieces.âÂ
âYa know, something a little more grandiose than just âtrick,ââ begged Craig Karges, a Wheeling resident who has performed more than 5,500 mindbending shows worldwide and across the country. âAnd the pieces make up my routines.â
Routines?
âRoutines.âÂ
Karges has been amazing audiences since he was in grade school at St. Vincentâs. Itâs how he paid for college, an education, as it turned out, he didnât need. It is the only job heâs ever had.
âI thought Iâd have to have a full-time job and that I would do this other stuff on the side,â he said with a chuckle. âBut the show was really popular for a long time. In fact, until Covid hit, I was really, really busy. Itâs only now really starting to come back.â
And that is why Karges has resumed developing new âperformance piecesâ for his âroutine.â Itâs been fun, he insisted, until, that is (he has to admit to himself) he doesnât feel it.
âI have come up with new pieces in a lot of different ways. Iâve seen things in movies, or Iâve read about something somewhere, and I would think about how I could bring the impossible into the show,â Karges explained. âBut whatâs really difficult is practicing it because everything I do is very interactive and interactive with strangers. That means itâs really impossible for me to practice with my wife because she knows me too well, and it doesnât work that well.
âSo, what that means is that I have to put the piece into the show and see how it goes, and if it really doesnât feel as if belongs, I either change it or get rid of it, but I have to see if it has legs. Sometimes it does, and sometimes it doesnât,â he said. âAnd then I have to do it at least a dozen times before I feel comfortable doing the new piece and to see what the response is. Itâs really trial and error and thatâs because it usually changes from show to show because itâs all live. And yeah, it has to feel right.â
Karges has performed for college students and corporate executives during his career.
Or When There's Bloodshed
But is he a âmentalist,â an âextraordanist,â or an âillusionistâ?
âIn the beginning, people called me a magician, but I donât do magic, so thatâs not true,â Karges said smiling. âI donât know. I guess Iâm an entertainer who does cool stuff.â
And the Central Catholic alum has performed in 27 countries and all 50 states, and it truly is all fun and games.
Until Karges bleeds, that is.
âTo be able to do the things I do on stage, thereâs a skill set you have to learn, but another part of it is the art of it all. I may be doing the piece, but I dress it up so I can do what I have to do to make it all work. At least thatâs the way itâs supposed to take place,â he explained. âNow, I do this one piece blindfolded where I have these cups, and one of them is covering a spike. I smash the cups while avoiding the spike, but I spiked my hand one day in front of the service personnel of Ohio County Schools.
âWhen that kind of stuff happens, and it does sometimes, I try to figure out why it happened,â Karges said. âWell, that day, I determined I was too focused on the new material in the show and not concentrating well enough on the material that had been in the show for a while.â
Most of the time, heâs able to play it off and act like nothing went wrong at all. If there is blood, though?
âThatâs when it can be really embarrassing,â Karges said â this time with a straight face. âAnd yes, I do try my best to avoid it in the future.â
Karges often works on new material in an effort to keep it fresh.
Will You Still Need Me, Will You Still Feed Me âŚ
When I'm Sixty-Four
There was this one day in March 2020, when Kargesâ show schedule was full.
And then the very next day his âroutine sheetâ was blank, and all residents in the tri-state area were told to go home and stay there. Something called Covid took over, and the virus grounded this extraordinaire to his Wheeling home with his wife, Charlotte.
âThe worst part was that no one knew what the future looked like,â Karges remembered. âI did a lot of corporate shows, and those disappeared immediately and are only now starting to come back. Theatres shut down, too, and so did the schools, so we just hung out and ordered a lot of take-out.â
The college circuit was the first to recover, but the theatre industry and corporations have continued to exercise caution when planning employee events. The pandemic, though, caused a pause in an otherwise hectic travel and performance schedule.
âI had taken vacations and time off before, but never that long,â Karges said. âIt made me think about how much I still love doing the show, and I did spend time developing new material while everyone waited for things to get back to normal. Now that it is, Iâve been trying to get it built back, but I do wonder sometimes how much it can be built back.
âTrust me, Iâm not done and wonât be for a while,â the virtuoso added. âBut itâs going to be interesting to see how the rest of the world cooperates.â












